What does it mean to be human? That's a difficult question to answer nowadays, especially for someone like me. Now that the United States of America has finally decided to follow in its neighbor Canada's footsteps and grant human rights status to genetically engineered individuals, and not only abolished commercial civil engineering of humans at the same time but started pressuring Asia, South Africa and Europe to do the same, my kind are considered cool now.
All kinds of people in Hollywood and the worlds of professional sports, politics, adult entertainment, music and science are coming out and revealing that they're Gen-Tech people, and the general public is loving it. I haven't seen this much public hugging and crying since Saudi Arabia became the last country to legalize Gay Marriage in 2097, shortly after former Princess Afaf Al-Saud became the newly democratic country's first female President.
I'm from the old days, I guess that's why I'm still jaded. I was built in a lab by geeks working for Oshiro/Wendell Enterprises, the global conglomerate that rules much of the world. On February 5, 2077 A.D. I first saw the light of day through these inhuman eyes of mine. I possess both human and animal DNA, and thus I'm classified under meta-human instead of Homo Sapiens. I'm considered an aberration, the other, something that shouldn't exist.
How do I feel, now that I officially have human rights? I've studied much of human history and from what I gather, respecting the rights of those less powerful than them or outnumbered by them has never been the defining characteristic of any group of humans at any point in human history. Look at what Europeans did to Natives in the Americas during the colonial days. I have no desire to let that happen to my kind. It's a good thing I'm stronger than you people. The humans seem to be less prejudiced toward us now but I'm still cautious.
My name is Amaya Yamamoto-Mahdi and I'm a gal with a story to share with you. Anyone looking at me would see a perfect replica of a five-foot-ten, slim and fit yet curvaceous Asian woman with long black hair, light bronze skin and golden brown eyes. That's where the resemblance ends, because nothing else about me is normal. I only weigh sixty eight kilograms but I can lift seven point six times that. That means I can lift you clear above my head and toss you around like a beach ball.
These days, I'm a graduate student advisor at Carleton University in the City of Ottawa, Ontario, where I studied civil engineering ages ago. Devoted wife to Crown attorney and author Ibrahim Mahdi, and also the proud mother of a beautiful brown-skinned and emerald-eyed little angel, Aisha Yamamoto-Mahdi, that's me in a nutshell. Our daughter Aisha is the result of a most unique pairing, Somali-Canadian Muslim attorney and public intellectual and genetically enhanced Japanese Superwoman. Damn. She's really gonna be something, eh?
Why did I leave my native Japan for the Confederation of Canada? I came to Canada as a refugee, and became so much more. Today I'm a devout Muslim, a working professional, and a devoted wife and mother. I wouldn't have these things if I stayed in Japan. I'd probably be dead, after a lifetime as a sex slave, exotic entertainment provider or bodyguard for a rich bozo.
Japan is the only country that tried to wipe out its meta-humans rather than granting them human rights. It's a good thing I left Japan several decades before the Culling officially began. Luckily, thousands of Japanese meta-humans fled to North America. For our kind, it's long been the promised land.
Why is that? Well, Canada is the first country where meta-humans are considered people, and have been granted refugee status thanks to the U.N. and the dedication of Canadian human rights activists. Everywhere else on twenty-first century planet Earth, including almighty America? We're genetically engineered soldiers, sex toys, exotic servants and the like.
Basically, anyone with enough cash can order themselves a genetically engineered pet. Slavery was outlawed in the 1860s but those laws only applied to normal human beings. Before the Age of Reunification between Man and Superman, genetically engineered wonders like myself were seen as fair game by the unscrupulous out there. Due to the two percent animal content of our DNA, which grants us exceptionally athletic bodies and sharp senses, we were considered inhuman. We had no human rights.
When I came to Ontario, Canada, and left my old world behind, I swore to myself that I'd try to stay out of trouble. I put my early days in Japan behind me. In those trying days, the only person who knew my secret was Ibrahim Mahdi, this seemingly random guy who came to my aid when I got into a bar fight with some lowlifes in this bar in downtown Toronto. Turns out Fate had much in store for Ibrahim and I, but neither of us knew it at the time.
I walked into the Lotus Bar in Chinatown because, well, I was bored and thought I'd chill there for a bit. Toronto is a big place and can feel overwhelming at times. I gravitated toward a place where I thought others like me might congregate, even if the resemblance was only skin-deep. As soon as I walked in, three bozos gawked at me.
"Hello sweet thing," a tall, bald-headed white guy with tattoos said, looking me up and down. Now, any other woman would have known that dealing with strange men in a setting such as this gloomy bar in one of Toronto's rougher areas was a bad idea. I'm not the average woman, unfortunately.
"What's up dude?" I said, just to be polite, even though I probably should have just ignored him. Attractive young women who go to bars tend to get hit on by all kinds of guys. I would have known this if I'd been a normal woman. The thing is that when you're genetically engineered and put through the accelerated growth process because your Owner ordered himself or herself a super-soldier or bodyguard, you mature physically but mentally, well, you've got some catching up to do.
I'm no slouch in the brains department, not by a long shot. I have an IQ of 180. I can lift up to five hundred and seventeen kilograms in a dead lift. I can run at a top speed of 40 kilometers per hour. Intelligence is no substitute for common sense or experience, I'm afraid. Genetically speaking, I might be a superwoman but chronically I was only five years old, housed in the body of a 20-something Asian supermodel.
"Watch out for these guys honey," the bartender, a red-haired plump woman, said to me after I ordered the only drink I knew the name of, a Martini, shaken and not stirred. Vincent Tsukuda, one of my creators, had a fondness for old James Bond movies, I guess.
"Thank you ma'am," I said, looking at the bald-headed guy as he came toward me, flanked by his buddies, a young Filipino guy and a tall, skinny guy with purple hair and a diagonal scar on the left side of his face. They smelled wrong to me, and I instantly knew why. They were construction workers, constantly exposed to the semi-radioactive, poisonous smog that hung over much of North America in those days.